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World History For Dummies Cheat Sheet

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2022-02-25 17:29:35
The Middle East For Dummies
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One effective way to approach the tremendous breadth and depth of world history is to break it into digestible bits of information. Here are four approaches to putting the many millennia and decades in perspective by looking at civilizations and societies as they changed, at ruling dynasties, at advances in science and technology, and at the deadliest wars.

An abridged timeline of civilizations and societies

Here’s a selected sample of societal mileposts as civilizations have developed and grown since the rise of the earliest settled communities.

About 9000 BCE: People built the first of many successive human settlements at Jericho, on today’s Palestinian West Bank.

About 7500 BCE: Çatalhöyük, one of the world’s earliest urban centers, took shape in southern Anatolia (today’s Turkey).

About 3150 BCE: Upper Egypt and Lower Egypt united into a single political entity under King Narmer.

About 2800 BCE: The Indus Valley civilization (also called Harappan) flourished in what is today northwestern India and southeastern Pakistan.

2200 BCE: Ibbi-Sin, ruler of the city-state of Ur (today’s southern Iraq) was unable to mount an effective defense as the seminomadic Amorites attacked repeatedly.

Around 2000 BCE: Under the rule of the Xia Dynasty, considered to be the kingdom’s first ruling family, China became a center of bronze-based metalcraft.

Around 2000 BCE: Farmers and herders from Ethiopia traveled south to settle in what is now Kenya.

Around 1800 BCE: The city of Troy was a thriving coastal community in Anatolia.

1760 BCE: Japanese farmers begin cultivating rice.

1400 BCE: After the Palace of Minos at Knossos, Crete, was destroyed, possibly by invaders, the once-dominant Minoan civilization fell into steep decline as Mycenae, on the Greek mainland, became a military and economic power center.

About 1200 BCE: Along the Gulf of Mexico, in today’s Mexican state of Veracruz, the Olmec civilization took shape.

11th century BCE: Tribes descended from the patriarch Abraham united to create the Kingdom of Israel, under King Saul.

771 BCE: Rebel forces from the vassel state of Shen, allied with nomadic tribes from the west, overran the capital city of Hàojīng (near today’s ’s Xi’an, China) marking the end of the Western Zhou Dynasty.

600 BCE: Greeks from what is now Turkey founded the city of Marseille, France.

509 BCE: Romans rebelled against King Lucius Tarquinius Superbus and drove him into exile, replacing the former monarchy with a Greek-style republic.

About 200 BCE: In the Andes of South America, the Nazca culture arose after the fall of its predecessor, the Chavín culture.

First century BCE: Mesoamericans, likely of the Olmec civilization, developed a calendar that would be adopted and adapted by subsequent pre-Columbian civilizations in Mexico and Central America. The most complex and accurate of ancient calendars, it’s known as the Maya Calendar.

200 CE: What’s called the Classic Age of the Maya civilization began in Central America.

400 CE: Tradition says that in this year, the legendary Richū became emperor of Japan upon the death of his father, Nintoku.

410 CE: Honorius, emperor of the Western Roman Empire, told Roman communities in Britain to look to their own defense, effectively ending Roman rule on the island.

800 CE: Pope Leo III crowned the Frankish king, Charlemagne, Emperor of the West, beginning the Holy Roman Empire.

Ninth century CE: England was under the control of Anglo-Saxon rulers.

1200 CE: After years of diplomacy and military force, the Central Asian tribal leader Temüjin brought warring confederations together into a Mongol alliance. Renamed Genghis Khan, he went on to conquer a massive empire.

1492: The navigator Christopher Columbus arrived on American islands, bringing with him diseases that would devastate the indigenous populations of the Western Hemisphere as Spanish, Portuguese, French, English, and other European powers forcibly colonized the American continents.

1510: Spain began making regular shipments of enslaved laborers from Africa to its New World colonies.

1619: The governor of Virginia, an English colony, bought “20 and odd” African people to serve as involuntary laborers.

1800: The world’s population approached 1 billion.

1807: The Parliament of the United Kingdom passed the Abolition Act, prohibiting British participation in the transatlantic slave trade.

1830: Greek revolutionaries declared independence from the Ottoman Empire.

1917–1918: At the end of World War I, the Ottoman, Austro-Hungarian, German, and Russian empires all ceased to exist.

1997: Prince Charles, heir to the throne of the United Kingdom, declared “the end of the (British) empire” as China peacefully took possession of the Territory of Hong Kong, a British colony since 1841.

2021: The United Nations’ World Population Clock estimated the global population as 7,903,857,918.

Dynasties are not forever: An abridged timeline of power families

Throughout civilization, many rulers have passed their titles and authorities to offspring. Some cultures stand out as exceptions, especially in recent centuries, but the right to govern has often been assumed to be assigned by genetics. Nepotism has been a powerful force in world history. Here is an overview of some of the world’s most notable dynasties.

Dynasty IV:

  • About 2613–2494 BCE, Egypt
  • Over the reigns of six successive kings, ancient Egypt saw remarkable prosperity and relative peace. The arts and architecture, including the building of pyramid tombs and other monuments, flourished. Khufu, credited with building the Great Pyramid of Giza, was the second of these rulers.

Zhou Dynasty:

  • About 1046–256 BCE, China
  • China’s longest dynasty started when Wuwang, king of Zhou (western China), formed a coalition with eight other border states to bring down the Shang Dynasty. Almost eight centuries later, rivalries between noble families threw China into a period of civil war, and the Zhou Dynasty finally fell in 256 BCE, defeated by Zhuangxiang of Qin, whose son later founded the Qin Dynasty.

Carolingian Dynasty:

  • 750–987 CE, Frankish, Holy Roman Empire, France, Italy
  • This dynasty reached its height with Charlemagne, whom the pope crowned Emperor of the West in 800. Charlemagne amassed the largest European empire since the Romans, which began in power struggles between prominent Frankish families and ended with the death of the ineffective Louis V of France.

House of Hohenzollern:

  • Before 1061–1947 CE
  • The numerous descendants of Burkhard I, Count of Zollern, included emperors, kings, and princes in Prussia, many other principalities within the Holy Roman Empire, and eventually the German Empire of 1871–1918. Kaiser Wilhelm II may be the best known of the many rulers in this line. King Michael of Romania was the last, deposed by his country’s Communist government.

House of Habsburg:

  • 11th century–1918 CE
  • Named after an 11th-century castle in Switzerland, this noble family included many Counts of Habsburg until one of them, Rudolf IV, also gained the title Duke of Austria and the designation King of the Romans (a step toward becoming Holy Roman Emperor) in the 13th century. After Rudolf IV came many Holy Roman Emperors, Grand Dukes, and kings of Spain and Austria.The Habsburgs were infamous for marrying close relatives, a practice that kept power in the family but led to genetic defects that included distinctively misshapen jaws. Maria Theresa — empress of lands including Austria, Hungary, and Bohemia — was the last direct paternal descendant of the line to rule, which she did until 1741. Charles I of Austria was the last with Habsburg heritage to rule, which he did until the end of the Austro-Hungarian Empire after World War I.

Tokugawa Shogunate:

  • 1603–1868, Japan
  • Emperor Go-Yōzei awarded the title shogun (chief military commander) to 60-year-old warlord Tokugawa Ieyasu after Tokugawa’s forces prevailed over a coalition of rival clans in the Battle of Sekigahara. Tokugawa united Japan under a military government, with power passed from generation to generation within his clan. The dynasty was finally undone by pressure to end Japanese isolation and adopt Western technologies.

House of Windsor:

  • 1901–present, United Kingdom (previously, until 1917, the House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha)
  •  An offshoot of the German dynasty Sachsen-Coburg und Gotha, founded in 1826, the family joined British royalty in 1840, when Albert, a German prince, married Queen Victoria (of the House of Hanover). Their son, Edward VII, was the first British king of the new line. His successor, George V, changed the family name to Windsor in 1917 because of anti-German sentiment during World War I.

Breakthroughs in science, engineering, and medicine

The greatest minds produce ideas and discover concepts that rearrange humankind’s understanding of the world and the universe around us. They also devise inventions that change the way people live. Here’s an extremely abridged list of some of the greatest breakthroughs.

About 1600 BCE: A Babylonian astronomer, his name lost to time, tracked the appearances of Venus over a 21-year period. The record of his research lay buried in the ruins of the Library of Ashurbanipal (a Neo-Assyrian emperor) for centuries until 19th-century CE archaeologists unearthed it.

As early as 960 CE: Chinese warriors used gunpowder to propel or arm military weapons, including grenades, cannon, land mines, rockets, and “fire arrows.”

About 100 CE: Cal Lun, an official of the Chinese royal court during the Han Dynasty, is traditionally credited with the invention of paper.

About 1439: In Strasbourg, near today’s French–German border, Johannes Gutenberg developed a system of movable type for a printing press of his own design and began printing books. The Gutenberg Bible, perhaps printed by Johann Fust and Peter Schöffer (who foreclosed on Gutenberg’s invention to settle a debt) is the most famous. Printing technology and books began to spread across Europe.

1543: In his book On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres, the Polish polymath Copernicus described a solar system with the Sun at its center. This challenged the accepted geocentric (Earth-centered) model described by the astronomer Ptolemy, who lived in Roman Egypt during the second century CE.

1628: English physician William Harvey published his findings on the circulation of blood and the human circulatory system, correctly describing a single system of veins and arteries.

Around 1712: Tomas Newcomen, an English ironmonger, borrowed ideas from other inventors and put them together to develop a commercially viable steam engine. First used to run a pump, the engine would revolutionize industry and transportation.

1796: Edward Jenner, a physician from Gloucestershire, England, pioneered the field of immunology when he demonstrated that a deliberate infection with cowpox could serve as protection against the related, but far more serious, disease smallpox. He coined the word vaccine.

1881: Louis Pasteur of France isolated the deadly anthrax bacterium and developed a vaccine to protect against it.

1896: Guglielmo Marconi began a series of demonstrations for the British government to introduce his wireless telegraph system — the beginning of radio.

1905: Albert Einstein, a young patent clerk in Switzerland, published two articles about the properties of light and time. Central to his argument is the idea that mass and energy are the same thing, expressed in his famous equation E=mc2 (energy equals mass times the speed of light squared).

1928: Alexander Fleming, a London physician, observed that a fungus growing in one of his laboratory petri dishes could halt the growth of a bacterial culture. Fleming, credited with discovering penicillin, shared the 1945 Nobel Prize in Medicine with researchers Boris Chain and Howard Florey, who refined his discovery into a world-changing agent against infection.

1953: In an article for the journal Nature, biophysicist Francis Crick and molecular biologist James Watson described the double-helix structure of the DNA molecule, a breakthrough enabled by the work of crystallographer Rosalind Franklin. Their discovery has enabled all genetic research ever since.

1958: Jack St. Clair Kilby, an engineer for Texas Instruments, put an entire electronic circuit on a single wafer of silicon, inventing the microchip.

1979: Nippon Telegraph and Telephone unveiled the first cellular telephone network in Japan. The DynaTAC8000X, manufactured by Motorola, became the first commercially available mobile phone.

1983: American biochemist Kary Mullis invented polymerase chain reaction (pcr), a way to quickly make millions or even billions of copies of a small DNA sample. This enabled many kinds of DNA analysis for fields including medicine, zoology, forensic investigations, archaeology, and paleontology.

1989: Tim Berners-Lee, a British computer engineer, invented the World Wide Web.

2020: The pharmaceutical companies Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna developed and made available a new kind of vaccine for use in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic. Unlike traditional vaccines, including others rapidly developed for use in the pandemic, these vaccines use messenger RNA (mRNA, a nucleic acid related to DNA) carrying a code that teaches human DNA to make proteins that trigger an immune response against the invading virus.

10 of the deadliest wars in history

Studying history’s wars includes the tricky business of figuring out how many combatants were killed (a figure that isn’t always well documented) and the often-impossible business of estimating how many noncombatants died from war-related causes.

Scholars have cited the following ten wars, listed in order of fatalities, as the deadliest ever:

World War II: (Allied Powers versus Axis Powers) 1939–1945; about 70 million deaths: 20 million military, 50 million civilian

Taiping Rebellion: (Christian rebels versus China’s Qing Dynasty), 1850–1864; as many as 30 million deaths, with no reliable breakdown of military versus civilian casualties

Second Sino-Japanese War: (China versus Japan), 1937–1945; an estimated 29 million deaths: about 4 million to 5 million military, as many as 25 million civilian

Manchu Invasion of China: (contentious transition from Ming to Qin dynasties), 1618–1683; as many as 25 million deaths, with no reliable breakdown of military versus civilian casualties

World War I: (Allied Powers versus Central Powers), 1914–1918; about 18 million deaths: 9 million military, 9 million to 10 million civilian

Dungan Revolt: (Hui Muslim rebels versus China’s Qing Dynasty), 1862–1877; at least 10 million combatants and civilians killed, most of them members of the Hui minority

Russian Civil War: (Red Army and allies versus White Army and allies versus other belligerent groups), 1917–1923; as many as 9 million killed by war-related causes, among them at least 750,000 military personnel

Chinese Civil War: (Communist Chinese versus Republic of China) 1927–1936 and 1946–1950; an estimated 8 million deaths, military and civilian, many caused by war-related famine

Thirty Years’ War: (Anti-Imperial Alliance, including Bohemia and Prussia, versus Imperial Alliance, including Habsburg monarchies) 1618–1648; almost 8 million deaths, military and civilian, many caused by war-related disease

Napoleonic Wars: (French Empire versus a series of international coalitions of opposing powers) 1803–1805; as many as 6 million deaths, military and civilian, over the course of this series of wars

 

About This Article

This article is from the book: 

About the book author:

Peter Haugen is an experienced journalist, publisher, and author. He has written several history titles and appeared in publications like History Magazine and Psychology Today.